Abstract

The article is devoted to the analysis of representations and behavioral acts of soldiers and sailors of the Russian armed forces in connection with the practice of saluting in the first weeks of the 1917 revolution. The author considers various motives for denying the need for military greetings with lower ranks, the attitude to the requirements of the cancellation of this ritual by the Petrograd Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies and the War Ministry of the Provisional Government. The article also examines the impact of the political and ideological factor on the formation of the attitude of a significant part of soldiers and sailors to saluting officers in the conditions of a dynamically developing revolutionary process.

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